Size matters: Quantifying protest by counting participants

Since the 1970s, catalogs of protest events have been at the heart of research on social movements. Sociologists count the frequency of events to measure how protest changes over time or varies across space, as either the dependent variable or a key independent variable. This measure...

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Main Author: Biggs, M
Format: Journal article
Published: SAGE Publications 2016
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author Biggs, M
author_facet Biggs, M
author_sort Biggs, M
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description Since the 1970s, catalogs of protest events have been at the heart of research on social movements. Sociologists count the frequency of events to measure how protest changes over time or varies across space, as either the dependent variable or a key independent variable. This measure is disconnected from theory, which conceptualizes protest as collective action—by implication, what should be quantified are actions. Most fundamentally, counting events is inappropriate because it treats an event with ten participants as equal to an event with a million. This paper investigates three forms of protest: demonstrations, strikes, and riots. Their size distributions manifest enormous variation. Most events are small, but a few large events contribute the majority of protesters. When events are aggregated over years, there is no high correlation between event frequency and total participation. Therefore analyses of event frequency are not informative about the causes or consequences of participation in protest. The fact that the bulk of participation comes from large events has positive implications for the compilation of event catalogs. Rather than fretting about the underreporting of small events, concentrate on recording large ones accurately.
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spelling oxford-uuid:23cbfa73-a653-4478-9d30-5ba8cd95d0932022-03-26T11:46:10ZSize matters: Quantifying protest by counting participantsJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:23cbfa73-a653-4478-9d30-5ba8cd95d093Symplectic Elements at OxfordSAGE Publications2016Biggs, MSince the 1970s, catalogs of protest events have been at the heart of research on social movements. Sociologists count the frequency of events to measure how protest changes over time or varies across space, as either the dependent variable or a key independent variable. This measure is disconnected from theory, which conceptualizes protest as collective action—by implication, what should be quantified are actions. Most fundamentally, counting events is inappropriate because it treats an event with ten participants as equal to an event with a million. This paper investigates three forms of protest: demonstrations, strikes, and riots. Their size distributions manifest enormous variation. Most events are small, but a few large events contribute the majority of protesters. When events are aggregated over years, there is no high correlation between event frequency and total participation. Therefore analyses of event frequency are not informative about the causes or consequences of participation in protest. The fact that the bulk of participation comes from large events has positive implications for the compilation of event catalogs. Rather than fretting about the underreporting of small events, concentrate on recording large ones accurately.
spellingShingle Biggs, M
Size matters: Quantifying protest by counting participants
title Size matters: Quantifying protest by counting participants
title_full Size matters: Quantifying protest by counting participants
title_fullStr Size matters: Quantifying protest by counting participants
title_full_unstemmed Size matters: Quantifying protest by counting participants
title_short Size matters: Quantifying protest by counting participants
title_sort size matters quantifying protest by counting participants
work_keys_str_mv AT biggsm sizemattersquantifyingprotestbycountingparticipants